tv DW News Deutsche Welle March 29, 2023 5:00pm-5:31pm CEST
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inspiring story about survival. home and go get the tennis. i was the only one. what lies include music in nazi germany, watch now on youtube. b. w documentary. ah, ah ah, this is dw news live from berlin. britain's king charles is in germany on his 1st overseas state visit as monarch german president file to shine maya welcomes him and queen consort camilla to beat brandenburg gate here in berlin. the 3 day trip is being seen as a chance to strengthen ties with the continent that have been strained by bradford
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. also on the program d. w, as in eastern ukraine to hear how newly delivered at western battle tanks could make a difference in the fight against russia. waged on till night with vehicles, from the soviet to europe. and we'll talk to the photographer behind these iconic images from the bombing of money. you pull f, jenny mallow, left guy has been named one of this year's world press photo contest winners for communicating the har. ah, i pablo foley ass welcome to the program. king charles has arrived here in berlin on his 1st overseas visits since becoming british monarch charles and his wife camilla were welcomed with full military honors by german presidents. find out our stein, my large crowds gathered at berlin's brandenburg dated to see the royal pair in the
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evening. they'll be attending a dinner ceremony at los bellevue, the german president's official residence, charles and camilla. we'll spend 3 days in germany. they had originally planned to visit france over the weekend, but that was postponed jim to ongoing strikes in paris while president di my appraised the good relations between the 2 countries, including joint efforts in tackling the climate crisis, the energy transition as a global task. and we will only succeed in achieving sustainable economic activity and protecting of a planet if we work together at our correspondent emily gordon. describe the scene at the brandenburg gate as king charles arrived there. yet the atmosphere was pretty exotic. i must admit, there were lots of little crowds here to welcome the royal couple and the king
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charles and queen conflict. camilla welcomed here by german presidents. thanks. bye . touched on maya and but then also by a very large military, sorry, money with full, i'm sorry. with a full full military honors. and i was really quite extraordinary because that has not ever happened to ahead of states here at the punt board. gaze side of the atmosphere was ecstatic people. very excited to be here. and i think it was set the scene for how this visit is used in germany will tell us emily, because how popular are the royals here in germany? i think it's quite safe to say they're quite popular. if you look up holes over 50 percent of germans are say they're ardent fans with the royal family. and there are many reasons for that, right? i think on the one hand they enjoy the glitz and the glam, but also the gossip that surrounds the royal family. i think if you look at the top
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german tabloids, there's almost almost no day goes by without the raw is being featured in these magazines. but of course, there's also historical connections rise. i'm in queen victoria at the time she was married to a german prince. that connections was carried throughout the generations. philip a king, a king charles and his late father. they both spoke and speak. german considers that connection as well, but i mean if i'm honest, when i'm, when i was talking to them, the people who are standing here today and what they said about why they were here and why there was supporting this event here was they just wants to see german british relations being supported and being fostered again because they feel like it's such an important relationship to have. and they really welcome this visit as a sign that it's going to improve. now the future will tell us actually because how political is this royal visit? yeah, i think walla, to be honest, i think it's safe to say that some soft power has
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a richer soft power has now arrived in germany. it is quite common for the u. k. to use the roles as part of their diplomacy. if you look a, if you look at the time, if you look at the past, imagine 64. i think it was that create the queen elizabeth herself. she came to germany on a 1st visit and it was seen a sort of a sign. it was in the beginning of reconciliation between the 2 countries. and i think king charles's was that now that has a similar tone, a similar taste to it really because we've now seen use of dispute due to the bricks that negotiations. and now we're the wins or framework that has hopefully settled on this visit now by king charles and sort of thing of this is now we can, you know, this is the size of this is now the time for new beginnings, but also chose this. i think this is also signed from the british side that our relationship to germany is important. and that's why we're sending you one of our finest. thanks have either be plenty more, i'm sure. over the next few days,
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during charles and camilla's visit to germany, emily gordon at the brandenburg gate. germany's government want to make it easier for foreign workers to move to the country and fill wide reaching labor shortages. the law would allow people from outside the you to work in germany if they have a professional or university degree that is recognized in germany or qualifying experience. it also introduces a so called opportunity card for people to look for a job. here in germany, it follows a points based system that takes into account language skills, qualifications, and experience or german chancellor. all i've shown said the reform is sorely needed. damn both big cities as this is why we need this lord. now you to encourage qualified people all over the world to come to germany. language skills play a big role as to our country's employment needs, and it will be applied very broadly. afterwards,
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when the lowest finalized will make sure that the bureaucratic hurdles are removed, his to google cards and hook up to bald since. all right, let's be now to an for oscar yosh who is a member of the german parliament with the free democrat. and she has a focus on the migration system here in germany. welcome to d, w. so 1st and foremost, why does germany actually need to change its immigration rules? well, today is really a great day for all people who want to come to germany for work and also for germany itself, because germany is really in lack of workforce and, and we have a huge demographic problem just as many industrialized people have to. so we're really looking forward to welcoming people who want to contribute to our society and to our labor market. but tell us how will the changes actually make it easier for skilled foreign workers to settle? here in germany. while we now had the unique chance with our social democratic,
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green and liberal coalition government that we could overcome. cultural hesitancy towards all the thought of migrants and one flagship program, which we have introduced now is a point based system. and just as a canada and austin, australia and the immigrant societies have. so i think this is one big change. and the other project we met, we have embraced is to look after you come us practical work experiences, which is a huge shift also tell us something that we heard. chancellor shelves say he wants to remove bureaucratic hurdles. is that a promise? because speaking, as, as someone who moved here to germany as an immigrant, i can tell you that the system is fairly complicated. yes, i know, and germany, it's really so far lacking behind with digitization. and we do want and intend to
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leapfrog in this, in this respect and which is really needed. and as so, i really appreciate that the foreign office of germany as now scrutinizing all the processes around migration and wants to overcome all the hurdles and making those processes smoother and entity ties. it's all. now a recent study showed that more than half of germans think migration has been negative for germany. are you surprised by that and our lawmakers failing to explain then the positive impact of migration to germany? well, so far, very often, all sorts of migration have been put together and not really distinguished. and i think that's the majority, and i'm convinced of it that the majority of germans, i fully appreciate the contribution of migrant workers and people who have come to germany in the past decades and who are still coming to germany to contribute to our society as, as workforce and,
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and also as part of our society. so i think i'm very, i'm very confident that we can act on a very solid basis to open up this new source of, of inflow of people to germany. okay. well there, thank you for joining us on dw ambushed, go you wish a member of the bonus tag with the free democrats? thank you. let's have a look now at some other stories making headlines around the world. young lars military government has dissolved imprisoned, former leader own sons who cheese political party, the national league for democracy was one of dozens of opposition parties. visual claims failed to meet an election registration deadline. sushi led the n l d to a landslide victory in 2020. what was interested in a military coup? mourners are demanding answers after at least 38 people died in a fire at a mexican migration detention center. dozens more were injured in the city. in the
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blaze of the city of waters, which is a major crossing point for migrants seeking to enter the u. s. authority say some of the detainees set fire to mattresses after hearing they would be to port beijing has threatened to retaliate against taiwan as president sy in when heads to the u. s. she's expected to meet with us high speaker, kevin mccarthy on her way back from visiting taiwan central american allies. but china has warned washington against allowing the meeting to take place. then she sweden has summoned the russian ambassador to complain over comments. it said were an attempt at interfering with its nato application process. it comes after the ambassador released a statement saying, joining nato would make sweden a quote, legitimate target for russian retaliatory measures including military ukraine's president vladimir zalinski has extended an invitation to chinese eater.
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seizing ping to visit keith, speaking to reporters from the associated press, zalinski said the key was ready and willing to host sheet, yet he added that the pair hadn't talked since rushes and basil the invitation comes after the chinese leader met with the gardener in moscow. she called 8 piece mission last week. beijing has said that lines of communication with ukraine remain open while moscow says it has shot down a long range rocket supplied by the u. s. to ukraine. if confirmed it would be the 1st time russia had diamond, one of these far reaching weapons to keep says it needs to reach targets in russia, occupied parts of ukraine. the announcement follows a long awaited delivery of western battle tanks to ukraine from germany and the u. k, and so far keeps forces of how to rely on soviet made armor, mac sander and sent this report on the cruise, keeping the old tanks running these men or farmers from the south.
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now they belong to the most feared units on the battlefield. the soviet era t 80 takes 3 men to operate at 40 tons and driven at speeds of up to 80 kilometers an hour. gunner basil says the tanks scare the enemy. hello, i will tell you this. as soon as they see from the drones how the tanks are coming, then all the artillery is only aimed at us. they forget about the infantry about everything. so they're afraid also, but the tanks need a lot of attention. this one is more than a decade older than the mechanic yoda's and it shows the actual really key thought if the tank is on really uneven, groaned, it's often this part of the tracks that breaks and needs to be replaced every now and again. we also have to tighten the track sufficient. let jessica also me see. these tanks may be old and worn down, but they're easy to repair. if the men can get the spare parts,
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they often find them on the battlefield than martha was up to think it would have done russia. yes, many russian parts fit our vehicles just. we also dismantle russian tanks for spare parts in the undercarriage is suitable for the word, and often we find parts suitable for the engine blows up to syndicate with it more as i'm in it. at the start of the war, the ukrainian seemed to be facing a ship piri or tank force. but the russians deployed those tanks often in a very risky way without adequate protection from infantry or fighting vehicles. the ukrainians were able to take out and capture close to 2000 of those tax. but they're saying now if they are to have a chance of taking back territory, they would need a significant upgrade themselves with the men here are waiting for better tanks to arrive from friendly countries. no one ever got back from and out and share with the new ones are more maneuverable. they have other equipment of the thermal sites
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range finders in ramirez have say in check. the crew is more protected than the ammunition capsule is placed at the back. now incubation exists, shanisha ne cops last is anya. when they shoot, the capsule flies out, but we don't come follow any thighs. move our pos monitor out in our old tanks. we're sitting on a powder keg. now we're looking for chicken. ah, what he's actually sitting on is this all the tanks, ammunition that can go horribly wrong when an old tank like this takes a direct hit. tanks are seen as the key to a successful ukrainian character offense. the moral tanks that are destroyed, the greater the appetite for new better ones. at the jury
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of the world press photo contest has announced it's 4 regional winners. many of the images highlight the reality of the war in ukraine. they were taken in march during the siege of matthew pole, after russian forces invaded the country in february 2022. the document the atrocities that followed before the city fell in may. now one of the images, a photo of a heavily pregnant woman following an air strike on maternity hospital has become one of the defining images of the war. now earlier i spoke to have any model let got a regional winner of the world press photo contest, and we talk about the story behind the iconic picture. he took the injured, pregnant women in medical and about how all these events events had an impact on know these events. you definitely cannot forget, you know, you want to forget. but the photographs and videos which you are taking and where
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you pull is my friend mister soft turn off and we will try to forget, but it's so difficult. it's so impossible. and but photographs will always remind us what happened will happen there. what's happened there and and these particular picture we're talking about, you know, it's irina for 32 years old injured pregnant war and was carried by the rescue workers on the watermelon blanket in front of a code by rescue workers. they rushed to take her to the emblems of because she was do you know in that condition that she might get the 1st aid as possible? she had like a big wound or her body. you kind of see on
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a picture but was huge. and, and unfortunately, unfortunately, she and her baby did not survive in all day. the doctors tried to do the best and was speak to them after and trying to identify what's happened to them later. but important to us that they did, they did his wife and i spoke to her husband. ah. and he told me that he was assertion for her like in a different hospitals in the more ex, looking from different by just trying to find her. and in the hospital number 2, she found her and, and they buried her with her neighbors on the cemetery in maryville during the shelling. and nowadays he's trying as well to get what's happened and trying
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to to build a new life. broad, an open letter signed by ellen laska is calling for a pause on the development of more powerful artificial intelligence systems, citing risks to society and humanity. mosques, tesla is currently using ai for itself, driving cars, but the c e o has raised security concerns about a i, along with 1000 artificial intelligence experts and industry leaders, the letter coles on developers working on systems more powerful than open a eyes newly launched. when she p t for to pause their work for 6 months power to make time for safety protocols that will prevent potential economic and political disruption easy. i asked sophie, car i, bonnie from d. w. science. what is meant by the risk of potential economic and political
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disruptions? that is an incredibly good question to use a cliche, a if you re, between the lines. what i think is happening here is you've got a bunch of incredibly intelligent people, incredibly powerful as well in the tech industry saying, oh what, what have we done here? and they're almost screaming. we need outside help. i mean, if i was, if you were to allow me a fly editorialize ation here, this is a bit like a country developing a nuclear bomb dropping is and then saying, oh wow, is that what it does? and then being surprised when other countries want to develop one as well to the tech themselves. they really don't know what they're doing here. and they say it as well at the top of the letter that even the experts don't truly understand. com, predict, or reliably control these sorts of incredibly powerful as they call them, chew, and competitive ai, artificial intelligence systems. um, so it's, it's very difficult to know, but what they do. and it also quite telling here they're calling for capable
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regulatory authorities. well, resource institutions to cope with the dramatic economic and political disruptions . so that kind of saying this is already out of control. we need outside help. we are unable to regulate ourselves. um, and quite rightly your l must. it's a bit disingenuous really because ellen musk has raised concerned about artificial intelligence for years and yet has continued to invest in, ah, the artificial intelligence was on the board of open ey i, i still an advisor. so it's a bit of a weird situation and it has been called sort of moral panic. with that we seem to start the plenty to digest there. so for what safety protocols could be implemented from may i think you've touched on it there a little bit. but what could we potentially be seeing? why think, 1st of all, we, it would be quite wise to slow down the deployment of a i,
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and i think that sort of what they're talking about. so, and it goes counselor to their very principal of open ai releasing something can allowing the public to get acquainted with it, to become aware of a i and to use it and become i, i get an understanding of what it does. and at the same time, not unleashing this in such a way that it becomes an uncontrollable live experiment on the world population. as it is, you know, every time you feed a query into open a, our, into a, a, an artificial intelligence like this. you are actually helping it gets stronger, get more intelligence. and so maybe this is like a fight that maybe they're thing, you know, we need to roll this back. they don't want to have more powerful artificial intelligence systems to come in place. and they want to have government bodies, they want to have educational institutions, i'm sure as well to get on the right page to get to get up to speed with, with the thought which method. so there were basically,
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so i really do feel if i will again allow to editorial i just little bit to re between the lines because it's quite sort of vague, this open letter they're asking for outside help. they're saying we've unlinked something here that perhaps we shouldn't have. so it's difficult to know what exactly they want in detail terms, but they are saying we need to slow this down. some was, even though the genie is very much out of the bottle, including many will cliches. with that one came from but plenty, i guess there. so think are, i'll be thinking about this after the show. so finger avenue from dw science now to an exciting breakthrough by scientists lead by the university of cambridge in a new and efficient way of harnessing power from photosynthesis. it's a powerful chemical reaction that occurs implants. and the research published in the journal nature says it could one day become an important source of clean energy . at the beginning of photosynthesis, there's an explosion of energy,
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like the source of a river. extracting the energy from this stage has proved impossible, so far, pleasant hill scientist tried lasers. what we've done from the laser and shunned it directly into the room. so finally, to show on the waiver flashes a 1000000000000000 times faster than your full camera take to the laser, let scientists see what's happening at the start of photosynthesis and useful detail. for the 1st time, the laser showed the working of the electronics of the cell, but every, such as the target, once captured, the electrons were chaperoned out by molecules shown here by the white dots. you can't get better efficiency when teaching it right at the beginning of the whole rotation at right from the beginning that we can reach to maximum dishes. we got any experiment a dinner plate sized amount of the bacteria powered a computer for 6 months. this kind of efficiency is helped by how good plants are
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soaking up sunlight. plants absorb 100 percent of light from the visible spectrum of the sun. compare that to solar panels which absorb nearly a 3rd less the way plants get energy from the sun as 3 photosynthesis. in photosynthesis, plants take carbon dioxide from the air along with water and with the help of sunlight and chlorophyll, they turned into sugar and oxygen. these end products mean the chemical reaction forms the basis of most life on earth. plants use some of the energy they capture for functions like growing, moving towards or away from sunlight or for distributing nutrients around their stem, stalks and leaves. but not all of the energy absorbed is used, so scientists say the electrons taken from the plants are spare. now what the next challenge is, is to design ancient by which we can move that electron to, to,
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to your thought to an electron for new energy could look like solar panels or a, by a reactor, like a brewery, an ocean swim alongside. dolphins may be a dream for many of us, but hawaiian authorities are cracking down on swimmers who are accused of harassing the animals. a group of snorkeling has been filmed chasing after a pot of dolphins of hawaii's big island. a band came into effect in 2021 to stop people coming within 45 meters of the animals authority, say the swimmers were aggressively pursuing the dolphins and have launched an investigation well, before we go, here's a reminder of our top story. britons king charles is here in berlin, on his 1st overseas visits since becoming monarch charles and his wife camella. we're welcomed with full military honors by german president,
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politician di my i berlin's brandenburg gate. charles had originally planned to visit france over the weekend, but that was postponed due to ongoing strikes. they're made in germany. it's next to asking the question, why do we need to rescue big banks when they get into trouble? don't forget that there's plenty more news and analysis around the clock on our website, dw, dot com and follow up on our social media accounts are humble, is dw, i'm pablo danielle from the team here. thanks for watching. take care and they'll see you at the top of the next step with
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and what makes thank systemically, relevant, made in germany connect on d, w. o. in what our sports all about in winning fighting scoring. we say they're about never giving up the most exciting sport stories about people passion and their dr. sports life every weekend on d w o, the amount of cost is increasing every year. many im gonna working on landfill is the only why fairly holiday destinations drowning in plastic white wine and take
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